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isomer
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isomer

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The chemicals butane and methyl propane are isomers. Each has the molecular formula C4H10, but with different spatial arrangements of atoms in their molecules.

Chemical compound having the same molecular formula but with different molecular structure. For example, the organic compounds butane (CH3(CH2)2CH3) and methyl propane (CH3CH(CH3)CH3) are isomers, each possessing four carbon atoms and ten hydrogen atoms but differing in the way that these are arranged with respect to each other.

Structural isomers have obviously different constructions, but geometrical and optical isomers must be drawn or modelled in order to appreciate the difference in their three-dimensional arrangement. Geometrical isomers have a plane of symmetry and arise because of the restricted rotation of atoms around a bond; optical isomers are mirror images of each other (see chirality). For instance, 1,1-dichloroethene (CH2CCl2) and 1,2-dichloroethene (CHClCHCl) are structural isomers, but there are two possible geometric isomers of the latter (depending on whether the chlorine atoms are on the same side or on opposite sides of the plane of the carbon–carbon double bond).



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
optically inactive, being composed of equal amounts of dextrorotatory and levorotatory isomers.
One of the isomers was predicted to be an ideal stepping stone toward the kapakahines, but more difficult to make.
refers to a family of many isomers of linoleic acid (at least 13 are reported), which are found primarily in the meat and dairy products of ruminants.
 
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